Of course they did, I'm sure they had draw up a dozen different plans for an invasion.U.S. envoy accuses Russia of planning invasion
Yes, that place was attacked. Locals said runway was bombed but I think they do not know the whole story. More could have been damaged or destroyed.Has there been any indication of Russian air strikes against Georgia's military production infrastructure?
The TAM (former Sukhoi) Su-25 production and maintenance facility in Tblisi comes to mind.
Wow, the US is really trying to harm its relations with Russia, isn't it?U.S. envoy accuses Russia of planning invasion
11 Aug 2008 15:51:25 GMT
Source: Reuters
TBILISI, Aug 11 (Reuters) - Russia prepared in advance for an invasion of Georgia, U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matt Bryza told journalists after flying into Tbilisi on Monday.
"We heard statements saying that the Russian railroad troops that entered Abkhazia a couple of months ago were there for a humanitarian mission," he told journalists at the airport.
"Now we know the truth that these forces were there to rebuild the railway to allow ammunition and other military supplies to aid a Russian invasion." (Reporting by James Kilner)
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/LB156355.htm
The Russians already bombed it.Has there been any indication of Russian air strikes against Georgia's military production infrastructure?
The TAM (former Sukhoi) Su-25 production and maintenance facility in Tblisi comes to mind.
This is getting scary, I really feel we're into the unknown now. My feeling is if the US steps in it could trigger a wider conflict.Gori has fallen according to some media (who get their info off the Georgians) or hasn't according to Russian sources, the Russians definitely have moved into central Georgia though from Abkhazia at least. It looks like the Russians want regime change.
Russian MOD confirmed russian troops entered and leaved (lol?) Gori and Senaka after clearing them off Georgian military troops. Seems russian MOD is quite open in commenting situation, but have steady 12-16 hours delay to real time. So we can expect all news from russian MOD is delayed for that time, and Senak was really taken about 12-16 hours ago.Gori has fallen according to some media (who get their info off the Georgians) or hasn't according to Russian sources, the Russians definitely have moved into central Georgia though from Abkhazia at least. It looks like the Russians want regime change.
Why would you be surprised with this outcome, and just amagine, they did it with secondary land equipment due to owning the sky and airwaves. If you take away your opponents command and control topped off with total dominance in the air then your opponent is thru. A classic Airland Battle Doctrine.Suprizingly russians did better than I thought , didn't knew they had such a capability apart from the moscow guards , given that georgians equipment is upgraded by west and had drones and were trained by israeli instructors and given that 58th army had kinda obsolete equipment and that georgians were on higher ground afaik I have to say russians did pretty good for their standard, much better so than they would in the 90's.
Very interesting, this in fact does add to some troublesome issues that the rest of Europe could have, especially with the cost of fuel and maintenance.It is not just Oil/gas/minerals but entire transportation links through trains, road and air between EU And Asia that Russia has hold on it. without Russian most of EU airlines will be become out of business.
Globalization is good for creating wealth/high living standard to large population but it also create huge dependencies interms of transporation and energy which were not present couple of decades back. so i dont think EU is going to standup in any meaningful way. and there is even more reasons that will take the whole another thread.
Hmmm. Europe was dependent on imported energy before "globalization". So what's the difference now? IIRC 27% percent of gas consumption in EU is imported from Russia. If Russia ceases exporting, then there's no money to fund the war machine. Simple, 3/4 of growth in Russia since the post Soviet low has been in the energy sector. Not a diverse economy. Russia needs the cashflow and mfg from EU.Globalization is good for creating wealth/high living standard to large population but it also create huge dependencies interms of transporation and energy which were not present couple of decades back. so i dont think EU is going to standup in any meaningful way. and there is even more reasons that will take the whole another thread.
Exactly. But everyone should also remember - it is double edged sword. If EU refuses to buy Russian oil & gas once - Russia could relink it to China and Japan. And it could be quite hard for EU to change oil routes back...Using energy as a weapon is a Damocles sword. Do it for serious once...
Nope. Russia has amassed huge foreign reserves with practically no government debt. It can block energy supplies/minerals/timber etc couple of years to EU but still survive because it can import retail goods things from China/Vietnam/SK/NK. Russia companies hold now extends to NK/Central Asia/Mongolia all the way to North Africa. Russia controls airline/train/road routes.Hmmm. Europe was dependent on imported energy before "globalization". So what's the difference now? IIRC 27% percent of gas consumption in EU is imported from Russia. If Russia ceases exporting, then there's no money to fund the war machine. Simple, 3/4 of growth in Russia since the post Soviet low has been in the energy sector. Not a diverse economy. Russia needs the cashflow and mfg from EU.
Using energy as a weapon is a Damocles sword. Do it for serious once...
Remember its direct investment in factories not portfolio investment in stocks and bonds. because rising wages can afford those products.http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/16b967b0-673b-11dd-808f-0000779fd18c.html
Foreign direct investment from the European Union into China fell steeply last year from €6bn in 2006 to €1.8bn ($2.7bn). In Russia, it soared from €10.6bn to €17.1bn although observers fear the conflict with Georgia could now spook investors.
Funny thing, the word I was looking for was actually double-edged, not Damocles.Exactly. But everyone should also remember - it is double edged sword. If EU refuses to buy Russian oil & gas once - Russia could relink it to China and Japan. And it could be quite hard for EU to change oil routes back...